"The federal government has won its RICO [racketeering] case against Kwame Kilpatrick and his longtime contractor friend Bobby Ferguson. Kwame's father, Bernard Kilpatrick, was found not guilty in the racketeering charges, but he was found guilty of one tax charge. Kilpatrick and his longtime contractor friend Bobby Ferguson have been found guilty on multiple racketeering, extortion, wire and mail fraud charges. Kilpatrick has also been found guilty of mail and wire fraud."

"In 2008, the then-mayor was embroiled in a scandal over racy text messages to his mistress, and his family was being pursued for interviews by what he labeled a white racist media. At the end of a televised State of the City address, before a handpicked crowd of supporters, Kilpatrick fired back at his critics. ...

"Six months later, a far more subdued Kilpatrick resigned from office and admitted to a judge he'd lied about the text messages during a deposition.

" 'I lied under oath in the case of Gary Brown and Harold Nelthrope versus the city of Detroit. I did so with the intent to mislead the court, and the jury, and to impede and obstruct the fair administration of justice,' Kilpatrick said.

"He was sentenced to four months in jail and $1 million restitution.

"But while on probation, a judge found him guilty of hiding assets and sentenced him to 14 months of prison time."

"Kilpatrick was convicted on 24 of 30 counts. He and Ferguson were found guilty on multiple counts of extortion. Kilpatrick was also found guilty on several charges of mail fraud, wire fraud and for filing false taxes. Bernard Kilpatrick was convicted on one tax count, but there was no verdict for Bernard Kilpatrick on the racketeering charge.

"The most weighty of the charges was the one levied under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act (RICO), a 1970 law that was initially designed to combat organized crime but has since been used in several public corruption trials. In the Detroit case, prosecutors charged the group they called the 'Kilpatrick Enterprise' engaged in a pattern of criminal activity — one of the requirements of RICO ­-- that included at least two criminal acts."

According to the newspaper, "the most serious charges, including racketeering and mail fraud, carry maximum 20-year prison sentences."